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Richie Ryan (politician)

Irish politician (1929–2019)


Summary

Irish politician (1929–2019)

FieldValue
imageRichie Ryan, 1981 (cropped).jpg
captionRyan in 1981
officeMinister for Finance
taoiseachLiam Cosgrave
term_start14 March 1973
term_end5 July 1977
predecessorGeorge Colley
successorGeorge Colley
office1Member of the European Court of Auditors
term_start14 January 1986
term_end115 June 1989
predecessor1Chris O'Malley
successor1Barry Desmond
office2Minister for the Public Service
taoiseach2Liam Cosgrave
term_start21 November 1973
term_end25 July 1977
predecessor2New office
successor2George Colley
office3Member of the European Parliament
term_start31 July 1979
term_end33 June 1986
constituency3Dublin
term_start421 December 1977
term_end49 June 1979
term_start530 January
term_end522 February 1973
constituency5Oireachtas Delegation
office6Teachta Dála
term_start6June 1981
term_end6February 1982
constituency6Dublin South-East
term_start7June 1977
term_end7June 1981
constituency7Dublin Rathmines West
term_start8June 1969
term_end8June 1977
constituency8Dublin South-Central
term_start9July 1959
term_end9June 1969
constituency9Dublin South-West
birth_nameRichard Ryan
birth_date
birth_placeSandymount, Dublin, Ireland
death_date
death_placeClonskeagh, Dublin, Ireland
nationalityIrish
partyFine Gael
spouse
children5, including Cillian
educationSynge Street CBS
alma_materUniversity College Dublin

Richard Ryan (27 February 1929 – 17 March 2019) was an Irish Fine Gael politician who served as Minister for Finance and Minister for the Public Service from 1973 to 1977 and a Member of the European Court of Auditors from 1986 to 1989. He served as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from 1977 to 1986. He served as a Teachta Dála (TD) from 1959 to 1982.

Background

Ryan was born in Dublin in 1929. He was educated at Synge Street CBS, University College Dublin (UCD), where he studied economics and jurisprudence, and the Law Society of Ireland, subsequently qualifying as a solicitor. A formidable orator, at UCD he was auditor of the Literary and Historical Society (the L&H) and subsequently of the Solicitors Apprentice Debating Society (1950), and won both societies' gold medals for debating. He served as an Honorary Vice-president of the L&H.

After qualifying, Ryan worked for several solicitors' firms before establishing a private practice in Dame Street in Dublin, in which he remained an active partner until appointed to ministerial office in 1973.

Politics

He first held political office when he was elected to Dáil Éireann as a Fine Gael TD for Dublin South-West in a 1959 by-election, and retained his seat until he retired at the February 1982 general election to concentrate on his European Parliament seat.

In opposition, Ryan served as Fine Gael Spokesperson on Health and Social Welfare (1966–1970) and on Foreign Affairs and Northern Ireland (1970–1973). During this period he was involved in several important pro bono legal cases, including the 1963 challenge in the High Court, and then, on appeal, in the Supreme Court of Ireland in 1964, by Gladys Ryan (no relation) on the constitutionality of the fluoridation of the water supply. While the court ruled against Gladys Ryan, the case remains a landmark, for it established the right to privacy under the Constitution of Ireland (or, perhaps more precisely, the right to bodily integrity under Article 40.3.1.). The case also raised a legal controversy, owing to the introduction by Justice Kenny of the concept of unenumerated rights. Other notable cases involving Richie Ryan include a challenge to the rules governing the drafting of constituency boundaries, and an unsuccessful attempt to randomise the order of candidates on ballot papers (owing to a preponderance of TDs with surnames from the first part of the alphabet).

Fine Gael came to power in a coalition with the Labour Party in 1973, and Ryan became Minister for Finance. He presided over a tough four years in the National Coalition under Liam Cosgrave, during the 1970s oil crisis when, in common with most Western economies, Ireland faced a significant recession. He was variously lampooned as "Richie Ruin" on the Irish satire show Hall's Pictorial Weekly, and as "Red Richie" for his government's introduction of a wealth tax. Following the 1977 general election Fine Gael was out of power, and Ryan once again became Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs.

Ryan also served as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 1973 and from 1977 to 1979, being appointed to Ireland's first delegation and third delegation. At the first direct elections to the European Parliament in 1979, he was elected for the Dublin constituency and was re-elected in 1984, heading the poll on both occasions.

On being appointed to the European Court of Auditors in 1986, he resigned his seat and was succeeded by Chris O'Malley. He served as a member of the Court of Auditors from 1986 to 1994, being replaced by Barry Desmond. After retirement, he continued in several roles, including as a Commissioner of Irish Lights (until 2004) and a spell as Chairman of the Irish Red Cross in 1998.

He was the father of the economist and academic Cillian Ryan.

References

References

  1. "Mairéad RYAN (née King)". Funeral Times.
  2. "Richie Ryan". Oireachtas Members Database.
  3. "Richie Ryan". ElectionsIreland.org.
  4. (17 March 2019). "Former Minister for Finance Richie Ryan dies aged 90". [[RTÉ News]].
Wikipedia Source

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